Today, I accidentally broke the handle off the pull-cord of a
tractor-mower while mowing around one of the newly planted fields of the farm
where I’m working.
The broken cord whipped back into the engine. One of the
farmers got out her tools and put it all back together.
Last week, we spent several hours ripping damp rotting muddy
burlap out of fields that remain too wet to be planted. Other tasks have
included unrolling huge sheets of what feels like enormous dryer sheets to
cover newly planted seedlings and seeding fields in a palimpsestuous parody of
every peasant to ever sow a crop.
All in all, I couldn’t personally be happier with this mix
of mechanical and physical and green-growing skills. Basic capability is assumed, which is the fastest way to grow it, I have found. I have entered complicated
little worlds before and love them, although so much seems new that I am
overwhelmed by the seeming complexity of it all.
As the farm is in Concord, MA, I find the giggling ghost of
Thoreau on the edges of the field. Particularly, his often quoted and misquoted
advice to “simplify, simplify.”
With all due respect, I think this is bad advice. Or rather,
just poorly interpreted.
Nothing is simpler than how we live, most of us. With enough
money, really, I could get anything in the world delivered to my home, and make
my home anything, anywhere I’d like it to be. There are ways to live without lifting a
single finger.
What could be simpler than this?
It certainly seems that this way of living is viewed as a
goal for many people. Simple, easy, microwave everything, drive everywhere,
swaddle ourselves from any reality that might be disagreeable—from climate
change to social justice to our own sneaking suspicions that this ease of
living isn’t all that it promised to be.
For a semester in college, I lived in a cluster of yurts on
the edge of a lake. We had solar panels and a water pump and it was as messy an
experiment in off-the-grid living as I could hope for. Taking a shower was one
of the most complex operations I’ve participated in. First, you went down the
dock and grabbed a 5-gallon bucket of lake water. You lugged the bucket up to
the main site, treading over short stumps set down to make footing easier—this
had mixed results. At the shower stall, you poured whatever water hadn’t
sloshed out into a very large pot and lifted it up to a propane burner. Five or
four gallons of lake water takes a long time to heat up, and I rarely had the
patience for more than tepid. When your patience ran out, you lifted the
warm-ish water off the stove and poured it into another 5-gallon bucket. This
second bucket had a nozzle in the bottom with a handle to control the water,
and a slightly reinforced bucket handle so you could attach it to a pulley over
the open-air shower stall and hoist to an appropriate height.
Once the water bucket was hanging over your head, you hopped
into the little plywood cell, looked up at the hemlock trees, and fiddled with
the nozzle until a weasel-drool thin stream of tepid lake water leaked out over
you.
It is far simpler to take a shower at my apartment. And far
more comfortable. The water is hot and plentiful and I can be in and out and
clean in less time than it took to lug the water from the lake to the burner.
So, I think that “simple” is maybe the wrong goal to strive
for. There was something in the labor of that system that connected me to the world, took me in as a member of a complex web of labor and time and effort and resource and reward.
I think the same as I learn how deliciously complicated
growing food turns out to be—there are machines with gears and teeth and
purpose. There are plans and equations and chemical compounds of dirt and seeds
to compute. There are weather patterns to take into account and untold
varieties of challenges to be met. There is my own body as a tool to keep
strong and healthy to do this work.
None of it is pure or simple. Honest and clear and
complex—these are better words of advice for how to be in the world, how to be
with ourselves, perhaps.
On the radio last weekend, I heard a bit about Stanford
University divesting their endowment from the fossil fuel industry. This is excellent. One of the sound bytes I caught was “climate change solutions must
come from the private sector.”
How true.
Not the private sector of business and commerce—although if
that’s where your gifts and passions and talents lie, go for it—but the deeper
private sectors of our own hearts and minds.
The solutions are staring us in the face. They are simple in
the clarity of their truth, their obviousness, their proven ability to make us
less reliant on fossil fuels, to make our lives less crisscrossed with unseen,
unknown costs and infrastructures. The solutions are in the moments of clarity
and the imagination to believe in our heart of hearts at the times when the
world and our places within it actually, briefly, makes sense. And in the
courage to act in service to that clarity and imagination and hope.
What we need to do, what we are doing in so many ways and
places and corners of society is the complex daily work and effort that brings
these simple ideas to life. To our lives, and for the life and livelihood of
whatever we each hold dear.
As Thoreau also says, "Things do not change; we change." Let's. And let's be clear and complex. And have fun. And save the world and ourselves.
No comments:
Post a Comment